Configuration Best Practices
If you are running on Linux, consider these best practices. Typical Linux defaults are not necessarily well-tuned for the needs of an IO intensive application like NiFi. For all of these areas, your distribution's requirements may vary. Use these sections as advice, but consult your distribution-specific documentation for how best to achieve these recommendations.
- Maximum File Handles
-
NiFi will at any one time potentially have a very large number of file handles open. Increase the limits by editing /etc/security/limits.conf to add something like
* hard nofile 50000
* soft nofile 50000
- Maximum Forked Processes
-
NiFi may be configured to generate a significant number of threads. To increase the allowable number, edit /etc/security/limits.conf
* hard nproc 10000
* soft nproc 10000
And your distribution may require an edit to /etc/security/limits.d/90-nproc.conf by adding
* soft nproc 10000
- Increase the number of TCP socket ports available
-
This is particularly important if your flow will be setting up and tearing down a large number of sockets in a small period of time.
sudo sysctl -w net.ipv4.ip_local_port_range="10000 65000"
- Set how long sockets stay in a TIMED_WAIT state when closed
-
You don't want your sockets to sit and linger too long given that you want to be able to quickly setup and teardown new sockets. It is a good idea to read more about it and adjust to something like
sudo sysctl -w net.ipv4.netfilter.ip_conntrack_tcp_timeout_time_wait="1"
- Tell Linux you never want NiFi to swap
-
Swapping is fantastic for some applications. It isn't good for something like NiFi that always wants to be running. To tell Linux you'd like swapping off, you can edit /etc/sysctl.conf to add the following line
vm.swappiness = 0
For the partitions handling the various NiFi repos, turn off things like atime
. Doing so can cause a surprising bump in throughput. Edit the /etc/fstab
file and for the partition(s) of interest, add the noatime
option.